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Attempts of Transforming Teacher Practice Through Professional Development

Authors :
Montalbano, Vera
Benedetti, Roberto
Mariotti, Emilio
Mariotti, Maria Alessandra
Porri, Antonella
Source :
Proceedings of The World Conference on Physics Education 2012. p. 439-448, Ankara, Turkey, ISBN: 978-605-364-658-7
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

A difficult challenge in physics education is to design professional development programs for teachers, which can lead to fundamental changes in their practise. We report all activities for physics teachers in the context of the National Plan for Scientific Degrees in Southern Tuscany. Research and practice have shown that physics teaching in school is inadequate. The main consequences are limited achievements in school, decrease of students' interests in learning physics and decrease of enrolments in physics in many countries. In recent years, the decline in enrolments was faced up with the launch of a wide national project addressed to secondary school students and teachers. The active involvement of teachers in the design of laboratories was found to be essential for obtaining actions which were not transitory and entered permanently in classroom practice. We describe some advanced courses in Physics and Mathematics Education realized few years ago and courses designed for a Master in Physics Educational Innovation and Orienting performed jointly by many Italian universities. Other activities are less formal but equally relevant, such as the active involvement of expert, young and in training teachers in designing and implementation of laboratory activities for a summer school of physics. Recently, we developed a workshop for teachers of physics and mathematics on modelling. which continued in an updating course for teachers in which selected topics, named in the same way in both disciplines, were discussed in order to design interdisciplinary learning paths. The purpose is to clarify these topics by using specific tools from physics and mathematics and to outline the similarities and the differences in both contexts. We describe teacher reactions and the more significant difficulties we encountered. Finally, we discuss which kind of activity seems more effective.<br />Comment: 14 pages, 1 table, presented to The World Conference on Physics Education (WCPE), July 1-6, 2012, Istanbul

Subjects

Subjects :
Physics - Physics Education

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Proceedings of The World Conference on Physics Education 2012. p. 439-448, Ankara, Turkey, ISBN: 978-605-364-658-7
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1212.1042
Document Type :
Working Paper